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English

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Etymology

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From hall +‎ -ful.

Noun

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hallful (plural hallfuls or hallsful)

  1. A quantity that fills a hall.
    • 1938, Dorothea Brande, My Invincible Aunt, page 239:
      There was no vigor, no activity of the will anywhere in the great, amorphous hallful of humanity; everything truly admirable seemed gone, scamped, ignored, in her talk.
    • 1962, (Please provide the book title or journal name), page 31:
      I have unlimbered hallsful of folding chairs; rescued religion textbooks from the holy-water font; served on the Classroom Location committee (you use the four corners of the parish hall and start a novena for folding walls).
    • 2009, Joan London, The Good Parents, page 47:
      Jacob thought of the hallfuls of parents he had faced, term after term, queuing up for his good advice.
    • 2015, Suzannah Dunn, The Lady of Misrule:
      Harry, in a hallful of people I hardly knew; there he was, being so very much himself, so very ready to give of himself, and there was something close to comical about him – the ale-ruddied cheeks and cowslick hair, the popped buttons – but he was definitely in on the joke, which only made if funnier.